Author: Chan, Timothy Wai Keung1
Source: T'oung Pao, Volume 94, Numbers 4-5, 2008 , pp. 209-245(37)
Publisher: BRILL
Abstract:
This article examines late Tang poetic representations of the early fifth-century tale of Liu Chen and Ruan Zhao's romance with divine maidens at a Shangri-La-like peach blossom font. Shi poems by such poets as Liu Yuxi (772-822) and Yuan Zhen (779-831), and a group of Huajian ("among the flowers") ci poems under the tune "Nüguanzi" ("The Daoist Priestess") by Wen Tingyun (ca. 812-866) and others, reveal the exploration of the old tale as a rich source of allegorical tropes. In particular, the late Tang poets consistently revitalize the Liu-Ruan tale's bifurcation between the immortal and the mortal worlds, a division between "two worlds" that enabled them to express a range of different meanings at different levels, for example in politics or when talking of love affairs.Keywords: "TWO WORLDS"; "NUGUANZI" ("THE DAOIST PRIESTESS"); ALIENATION AND RECOGNITION; SEDUCTION AND ABANDONMENT; ALLEGORY; GROTTO
Document Type: Research article
DOI: 10.1163/008254308X385879
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